0 past simple and past participle of censor
1 to remove anything offensive from books, films, etc., or to remove parts considered unsuitable from private letters, especially ones sent during war or from a prison:
In addition, the sample size was relatively small and there was a large number of censored cases.
All patients were censored at 21 days, or at the point of withdrawal from the trial, if earlier.
The results reported do not take account of the categorical and censored nature of the dependent variable.
Inappropriate actions are not censored but corrected, so that suppression is inherently secondary to enablement.
For the 75+ years age group, only censored data were available.
Duration analysis is able to maintain these non-exiting candidacies in the dataset by treating them as right censored.
What is censored in one context, however, will be spoken in another.
Some episodes in recent history are too uncomfortable to be admitted, so they are censored out.